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Monday, April 27, 2015

What is gender, anyway? In the past few days alone, I stumbled upon some public and private evidence of people pondering this phenomenon. Of course there was the Bruce Jenner interview where he explained to Diane Sawyer that he "is a woman." I also noticed a book featured in the New York Times Book Review, "The Rebellion of Miss Lucy Ann Lobdell," by William Klaber, which chronicles the real story of Miss Lobdell's mid-19th-century accounts of dressing like a man (much like Fanny Fern did in the same era). On a more private front, a dear friend of mine gleefully told me about a gender-bender camping trip he went on where males and females switched clothing for the weekend and then discussed why and how this affected them. Lastly, I heard from a childhood friend who was horrified that her son's elementary school was strongly attached to hosting father/daughter "princess" dances and mother/daughter bowling outings -- despite outcries of sexism and heterosexism. (My friend suggested that the dance be a princess/prince dance, but her suggestion was shut down due to "tradition.")

Seems like it's getting to be time to deeply discuss this socially-constructed category meant to define us . . . and limit us. Are times a'changing, my friends? Is it just me, or are there more instances calling for gender bending tolerance and revision both in the larger arena of the public media, and in the smaller arenas of our personal discussions?

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Driving along rural roads in Mid-Missouri this time of year, I am awed by one
of the world’s most pleasant sights – baby cows (which, from a distance, look like Chocolate
Labradors scampering around the fields). All the cattle mothers are out lately, enjoying the spring weather with
their very cute youngsters.

When I first arrived in Missouri, I was amazed to hear that cattle
actually utilize a clever form of day care. One or two cattle moms stay in one part of the grazing field watching
over the herd’s calves. The other
females are free to go off and graze or to sun themselves in the grass, coming and
going to feed their littles as they please.
The mother cows rotate child-care duties so each cow gets a break, a
rest, and time to graze. Ingenious! And, too adorable for words. What behaviors in animals amaze you?

Sunday, April 12, 2015

When I went to Cuba in 2010 as part of an American
Association of University Women delegation, our group heard the same mantra
over and over from every group that met with us – “Please end the blockade.” We were to take this message (a message, I've come to agree with) back to anyone
who might listen. It was clear that the
U.S. trade embargo, enacted in 1959 after Fidel Castro and his brother Raul led
a revolution that toppled US-backed President Fulgencio Batista, had more than
served its purpose. The Castros, of course, went on to establish a
revolutionary socialist state with close ties to the Soviet Union, and the cold-war
U.S. was, understandably, on high alert, especially after the Cuban Missile
Crisis.

But, as so many Cubans pointed out to us, 1959 is
ancient history in today’s geopolitical arena.
There are countries that pose much greater economic and political threats
to the U.S. than Cuba does, and we willingly trade and talk with them. Why the long-standing cold shoulder? It was more than punitive. People in Cuba were suffering, and not just
because they couldn’t buy new U.S. cars. Not only could no U.S. business trade with
Cuba, but the U.S. forbid any ship from any other country to dock in any Cuban
port before entering the U.S. Foreign
trade ships who did work with Cuba were forced into a charade of stopping at
another foreign port, however briefly, before entering U.S. waters in order to
keep on our good side. And Cubans paid
the price of this double docking duty.
Anyone who traded with them (and who wished also to trade with the U.S.)
had to charge them extra. What a lot of
rigmarole. Not to mention being overly
taxing to the current economy of this struggling country.

Havana, Cuba, 2010

Here’s the good news. President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro met at the 7th Summit of the Americas in Panama City, Panama, and announced more progress toward the end of their differences. The meeting marked the first formal talks between the two countries' leaders in more than half a century, and both leaders expressed hope for, as President Obama put it, “a new relationship between our two countries."

Cuban President Raul, as expected, called for the lifting of the US economic blockade on Cuba and the country's removal from Washington's list of state sponsors of terrorism. The Obama administration is expected to remove Cuba from the terrorism list in the coming days, something Latin American and Caribbean leaders welcomed as healing for the region.

Monday, April 6, 2015

I woke up tired yesterday morning.
Happy, but tired. I’d stayed up much too late finishing a good book, and I know
you understand how much fun that can be. Which book, you ask? None other than
Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot
See, which rightfully placed as a 2014 National Book Award Finalist.

What can I say about this marvel?
I was captivated from page one, although I was ready not to be. The story of a
blind girl. The story of a Nazi radio whiz. Show me, I thought, in deference to
living in the stubborn state of Missouri. Show me how to make that sort of
story, those sorts of characters, work.

Hats off to you, Mr. Doerr. Your
book has indeed impressed this writer. The book starts at a fast clip and
gallops along until the end. Short, tense, lovely chapters. Intriguing,
well-portrayed characters. A good dose of history, too – the book details the
post-D-day bombing of St.-Malo, France, and the beginning of the end of WWII. What’s
not to love? I suggest you delve into this wonder as soon as you can. Even if you
lose a little sleep, I bet you’ll be glad you did.

About Me

I grew up in the Milwaukee area and graduated with a B.A. in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I worked as a journalist and taught at Milwaukee Area Technical College before beginning my graduate work. I received my M.A. and Ph.D. in English/Creative Writing from The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where I also taught. I now teach English and Women’s Studies at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri. For my fiction, I have received a Ragdale residency and was a recent finalist for the John Gardner Memorial Fiction Prize, The Cincinnati Review’s Schiff Prose Prize, and the Crab Creek Review Fiction Prize. My work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in Calyx, Tampa Review, Natural Bridge, The Laurel Review, REAL, The Southern Women’s Review, The Cimarron Review, Milwaukee Magazine, Phoebe, and other publications. My novel, Shame the Devil, is a historical account of nineteenth-century American writer Fanny Fern (SUNY Press, Excelsior Editions). I am currently working on another novel, set in Missouri, and on a short story collection.